We had a Church Picnic at St. George's every year, It was the biggest, and I think only fundraiser we had. I recall one year they netted $3,400, a great sum for that time, because most people couldn't give more than a nickel or dime at the time. They did also have a pew rental at the time. We donated $8.00 a year per seat and sat directly behind the Sisters (Nuns). We also had a school with all eight grades staffed by the Sisters of the Most Precious Blood, whose Motherhouse is still in Ruma, Illinois.
Dad was always generous with his food, He would give 10 to 15 chickens, several bushels of potatoes, dozens of eggs, tomatoes, green beans, and cabbage. I remember going with our Mother to take something to the picnic -- it seems to me it was pies. I guess I remember because it was just the two of us. I was sitting in the front seat next to her and couldn't see out the window, so I was pretty small.
There was a man who lived in a clubhouse along the Okaw, several miles away who had an eight gauge brass barreled shot gun, which he used to shoot ducks. It had a distinctive sound, a rolling boom. We always knew when he fired into a flock of ducks or geese. Sometimes one of these men who lived in club houses along the river got lead poisoning from eating too much wild game. Even if you got all the lead shot out of the meat, the lead pellets left traces behind as they passed through the meat.
In the late 1800s in the American Bottoms near Granite City at lakes like Horseshoe Lake, there were fantastic flocks, and hunters made long barrelled shotguns, like 9 ft. long barrels, using about one lb. of powder. They mounted one of these in a small skiff, and aiming the whole boat, fired into flocks of ducks. They made large kills which each shot, selling the ducks on the St. Louis market.
My Dad remembered when Passenger Pigeons were so numerous in flocks they would black out the sun passing over. They would descend on a grain field and wipe it out in short order. They started harvesting them for the market and in a few years they totally disappeared. I remember seeing a picture in a book saying the last one died in the Cincinnati Zoo in 1912.
When I was 17 years old WWII was in progress. I had always wanted to be in the Navy so I enlisted. A story of my adventures during that time can be read at My Navy Story.
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